Tawhid Paradigm and an Inclusive Concept of Liberative Struggle
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Shariati: A Liberative Recasting of Tawhid
3. An Intersectional Turn
4. Wadud: Tawhid and Islamic Intersectional Feminism
5. Accounting for Non-Muslim and Non-Islamic ‘Other’
6. Conclusions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In this article, I use the term liberative struggle in a broad sense to refer to all manners of social mobilization and discursive production that aim to bring about human liberation from various (class-based, racial, gendered, etc.) forms of subordination. This understanding of liberation and liberative struggle is informed by the interventions of a range of critical intellectuals (socialist, anti-racist, feminist, etc.) who have drawn attention to the multiplicity of the ways in which hierarchical socioeconomic and sociopolitical systems inform and reinforce differential manners of subordination. |
2 | Wadud (2006) maintains that while her gender-inclusive theological approach draws on feminist analysis, she identifies neither as feminist nor as Muslim feminist, but rather as “pro-faith, pro-feminist.” This, she further explains, is “because my emphasis on faith and the sacred prioritize my motivations in feminist methodologies” (p. 79). |
3 | In this article, I use the term non-Muslim ‘other’ in a broad sense to refer to a wide range of individuals and groups (including those who identify as ex-Muslims, those who adhere to religions other than Islam, agnostics, atheists, etc.) who do not self-identify as Muslim. While my usage of the term is more-or-less consistent with the way in which the term is used in the relevant literature, by placing ‘other’ in quotation marks, I intend to acknowledge the problematic connotations of the term and to question a manner of binary construction that always/already privileges Muslim identity (i.e., the Muslim ‘self’) vis-à-vis a range of alternative (religious and otherwise) identities. The article also uses the term non-Islamic ‘other’ in a way that is distinct from non-Muslim ‘other’. The former, in its broadest sense, might refer to Islam’s theological and ideological alternatives and rivals, including a range of religious traditions, as well as modern (religious and secular) ideologies. For the purpose of this article, however, I use the term specifically to refer to modes of theological and ideological production (other than Islamic liberation theology) that are concerned with the question of human liberation from the colonially and imperially globalized capitalist, racist, and patriarchal relations and structures of domination. These may include, but are not limited to, Christian, Jewish, Hindu, etc. liberation theologies, as well as socialist, feminist, anti-racist, and other anti-domination ideologies. I make a case that a genuinely inclusive liberation theology is one that opens itself up to alternative modes of anti-domination theological and ideological production, and that recognizes its ‘others’ as equal subjects and agents of liberation (i.e., equally deserving of liberation and equally capable of contributing to liberative struggles). |
4 | For a detailed biography, see (Rahnema 2000). |
5 | In Kaviriyyat, we find the clearest manifestation of Shariati’s pluralistic belongings and his cosmopolitan horizons. His creative and open-ended synthesis of Quranic notions with pre-Islamic Iranian, Judeo-Christian, Buddhist, and Hindu mythologies, as well as insights from various European literary and intellectual traditions, takes on a post-theological character. For a discussion on the cosmopolitan horizon of Shariati’s Kaviriyyat, see (Saffari 2019). |
6 | Intersectionality is a framework for analysis and praxis that draws attention to the multiple experiences of subordination and disadvantage that are produced by interacting (class-based, racial, gendered, etc.) systems of oppression. My contention that Shariati’s simultaneous attention to multiple and interacting systems and experiences of oppression signals a turn toward intersectionality is consistent with Tormos’s (2017) argument that, although intersectionality is a relatively new term and its current popularity is due primarily to the interventions of feminists of color, activists and intellectuals in the Global South have long “used intersectionality without naming it as such” (p. 710). For a concise review of the literature on intersectionality, see (Tormos 2017). For discussions on intersectionality and Islam/Muslim identity, see (Rahman 2010; Siddiqui 2020; Dorroll 2017). |
7 | Although Shariati denounced Soviet-style Marxism–Leninism and Stalinism, he remained deeply sympathetic to socialism, as evidenced by his self-identification as a God-worshipping socialist and his frequent use of socialist concepts and analytical tools. For a detailed account of Shariati’s engagement with Marxism and socialism, see (Bayat 1990). For other works that address Shariati’s engagement with the socialist tradition, see (Abrahamian 1982; Matin 2010; Akhavi 2018; Kanaaneh 2021; Fadaee 2022). |
8 | For a discussion on Shariati’s engagements with mid-twentieth-century postcolonial thought, see (Sadeghi-Boroujerdi 2022). For an examination of Shariati’s invocation of race in conversation with Fanon, see (Miri 2019). |
9 | It should go without saying that a more comprehensive account of Shariati’s thought, particularly when it is read in conversation with the interventions of those who came after him, ought to attend to contextual particularities and differences. I readily admit that my reading of Shariati’s text is inevitably informed by sensibilities that are products of my own, but not necessarily Shariati’s, context. The limited scope (and word count) of the present article does not allow me to adequately address these contextual determinants. Moreover, to argue, as I do in this article, that Shariati neglects to consistently and systematically consider the gendered implications of tawhid is not to suggest that he is wholly inattentive to the question of gender and the place of women in liberative struggles. Indeed, Shariati is emphatic that human liberation from relations of domination is inconceivable without the active participation of women. He criticizes Muslim traditionalists who seek to restrict women to the domestic sphere, and in his rereading of the early history of Islam, he depicts Khadijah, Fatima al-Zahra, and Zaynab bint Ali as exemplary women who played an integral role in the social and political affairs of their time. He is also critical of what he considers to be the sexual objectification of women in modern capitalist societies, and he lambasts the Pahlavi state and Eurocentric Iranian elites for equating liberation of women with consumerism and sexual commodification. Rather than following the examples of Western beauty pageants and fashion models, Shariati tells his female audiences they must learn about the lives and accomplishments of those Western women who refuse to be rendered mere consumers and sexual commodities, and who contribute instead to the scientific and social developments of their societies (Shariati 1980b, 1982b). Furthermore, even though Shariati does not directly address the issue of gender inequality in Islamic law, given his critical approach toward traditional Islamic jurisprudence, one may plausibly assume that he would be opposed to patriarchal readings of the shari‘ah. My contention here, that Shariati considers the question of women without consistently and systematically considering the gendered implications of tawhid, builds on the assessments of a number of other Shariati scholars. Among them, Mina Khanlarzadeh (2020), while noting Shariati’s simultaneous critique of the objectification of women under traditionalist and capitalist structures, concludes that Shariati’s theory of alienation does not account for the particular experiences of alienation informed by gendered identities, norms, and practices. Khanlarzadeh further argues that although Shariati depicts Zaynab bint Ali as an archetype of a liberated woman who achieves her full human potential by attaining social awareness and exercising political responsibility, his conception of emancipation presumes that “obtaining political consciousness and taking sociopolitical responsibility” will automatically pave the path to human salvation, regardless of gender difference. Likewise, Soussan Mazinani Shariati (2007) observes that Shariati discusses the question of women not as a distinct and independent matter, but rather as part of the broader issue of attaining emancipatory social consciousness and political agency in each society. As a result, she suggests, Shariati’s discourse addresses the general question of the emancipation of women without engaging with concrete concerns, such as women’s rights in the family, in marriage and divorce, and in the workplace. |
10 | For a detailed discussion on this, see (Rahemtulla 2017). |
11 | |
12 | See (Cone 1969, 1970, 1975). It bears mentioning that Cone’s Black liberation theology, conversant as it was with the Black Power movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s, was more radical in its understanding of liberative struggle than the justice-centric theologies of Martin Luther King Jr. and other prominent Christian theologians in the Civil Rights Movement. |
13 | For a comparative analysis of Williams and wadud in relation to the story of Hagar/Hajar, see (Dotson-Renta 2022). |
14 | Even though wadud frequently evokes class, race, and gender as three major categories of analysis, there is no doubt that her particular rendition of Islamic liberation theology gives primacy to gender inclusiveness. This uneven attention, one may argue, is necessary to compensate for a general neglect of gender inclusiveness in the works of other (primarily male) reformist and progressive Muslim intellectuals. However, that class is sometimes treated by wadud as a secondary or tertiary category is also consistent with a broader paradigm shift since the end of the twentieth century that has seen an increasing neglect of class analysis. |
15 | According to Shariati ([1970] 1988), the historical clash between the spirit of freedom and the structures of oppression has produced a corresponding clash between an emancipatory religion of tawhid and an oppressive religion of shirk (pp. 49–50). This war of religion against religion, he argues, finds a Quranic expression (21:51–70) in the story of Abraham and his monotheistic revolt in ancient Mesopotamia (pp. 38–39). After Abraham, the banner of tawhid was carried forth by Abrahamic prophets, including Moses and Jesus (Shariati 1981a, p. 62). Following their original revolutionary outbreaks, however, the transmutation of these religions from movement (nihzat) to institution (nizam) depleted these religions of their liberatory capacity and resulted in their cooptation into the apparatus of oppression (Shariati 1971a, p. 37). This cooptation, in turn, prompted the return of shirk, albeit masqueraded as tawhid. As the last of the Abrahamic religions, Islam came with the declared objective of “realizing the promise of tawhid in all spheres of life” (Shariati 1981a, pp. 147–8). However, the gradual institutionalization of Islam in the post-Muhammad caliphate system set the stage for a new form of shirk masquerading as tawhid. Led by Ali, Shi’ism, which Shariati defines as “Islam minus the [institution of] caliphate” (Shariati 1980a, p. 119), emerged as a revolt against this deviation. The assassination of Ali in 661 CE and the establishment in the same year of the Umayyad dynasty consolidated a split between an emancipatory Muhammadan Sunnism (tasannon-e Muhammadi) and an oppressive Umayyad Sunnism (tasannon-e Omavi) (Shariati 1971a, p. 301). This consolidation also set the stage for an all-out confrontation in the Battle of Karbala between Hussein ibn Ali and Yazid ibn Mu’awiya. Shariati’s declaration that “every day is Ashura and every land is Karbala” (Shariati 1981a, p. 453)—which is now a staple slogan in Shia communities throughout the world, especially during Muharram majalis (gatherings)—renders the Battle of Karbala as another reenactment of the primordial battle of tawhid and shirk (p. 27). And yet, with its institutionalization under Safavid rule, Shi’ism was coopted into the prevailing power structures. Henceforth, the history of Shi’ism too has been a history of a battle of religion against religion, between a revolutionary Alid Shi’ism (tashayyo-e Alavi) and a counterrevolutionary Safavid Shi’ism (tashayyo-e Safavi) (Shariati 1971a, pp. 47–48). Shariati’s call for unity between Muhammadan Sunnism and Alid Shi’ism is aimed at reviving Islam’s original tawhidic spirit. |
16 | A simultaneous theological and ideological privileging of monotheism is also evident in Shariati’s postulation that, by bringing together the liberative elements of all other religions, Islam presents the only genuine path to human emancipation. In Islam, he claims, the Buddhist pursuit of enlightenment; the Zoroastrian doctrine of good thoughts, good words, and good deeds; and the Christian ethics of compassion and altruism find meaning and direction in a tawhidic frame of reference (see Shariati 1981b). Although he recognizes Buddhism, Zoroastrianism, and Christianity as potential sources of liberative insight, this recognition is at once predicated on and serves to reinforce the privileging of theological monotheism over theological polytheism, and of Islam over other religions. In much the same way, Shariati’s (1977) provocative contention that the Hindu Gandhi, the Jewish and communist Georges Gurvitch, and the Sunni Ahmad ibn Hanbal and Abu Hanifa are closer to the spirit of Shi’ism than Shia clerics who serve the establishment (pp. 12–13) works to authenticate the Shia self, rather than to embrace the Hindu, Jewish, communist, or Sunni ‘other’. |
17 | |
18 | Although Rahemtulla makes this observation in reference to a similar hermeneutic move by the late Indian Muslim liberation theologian Asghar Ali Engineer, for whom Hinduism is, beyond its evidently polytheistic layers, an essentially monotheistic faith, Rahemtulla’s conclusion is equally applicable to wadud’s engagement with Hinduism. |
19 | The subject of interreligious engagement and solidarity has been considered by some of the scholars and advocates of Islamic liberation theology. Among them, the prominent South African Muslim liberation theologian Farid Esack has, in a number of works, including Qur’an, Liberation, and Pluralism: An Islamic Perspective of Interreligious Solidarity Against Oppression (1997), sought to advance a vision of interreligious solidarity in liberative struggles. While the tawhid paradigm is undoubtedly important to Esack’s rendition of Islamic liberation theology, Rahemtulla’s (2019) observation that Esack’s particular account of interreligious solidarity relies more heavily on the paradigm of Exodus, rather than that of tawhid (p. 32), may be indicative of the possible limitations of the hitherto renditions of the tawhid paradigm to meaningfully account for the non-Muslim ‘other’. |
20 | Intersectional solidarity, according to Tormos (2017), is an approach to solidarity “which consists of an ongoing process of creating ties and coalitions across social group differences by negotiating power asymmetries” (p. 712). Tormos’s observation that, while it requires the recognition of difference, intersectional solidarity is at odds with and undermined by the tendency toward essentialism (p. 708), ought to be taken seriously by the scholars and advocates of Islamic liberation theology as they engage in a rethinking of the binary construction of the Muslim ‘self’ and the non-Muslim ‘other’. |
21 | What Tormos refers to as “love for the other” is certainly present in the liberation theologies of Shariati and wadud, both of whom, as I have already remarked, seek to cultivate solidarity with the non-Muslim ‘other’. My intention in this article is not to dismiss the existing capacities in Shariati and wadud to embrace the ‘other’, but rather to reflect on the possible “unthoughts”—to borrow from François Jullien (2014)—of their thoughts in relation to the imperative of inclusiveness. Put differently, I draw on the emancipatory and inclusive spirit that informs the liberation theologies of Shariati and wadud in order to consider their contemporary and future relevance to liberative struggles in Islamicate contexts and beyond. |
22 | For Eliaçık’s critique of the bifurcation between Abrahamic and non-Abrahamic religions, see (Eliaçık 2012). For an assessment of Eliaçık’s rendition of the tawhidic paradigm, see (Saffari 2023). |
References
- Abrahamian, Ervand. 1982. Ali Shari’ati: Ideologue of the Iranian Revolution. MERIP Reports 102: 24–28. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Abrahamian, Ervand. 1993. Khomeinism: Essays on the Islamic Republic. Berkeley: University of California Press. [Google Scholar]
- Adhan, Syamsul Rijal. 2016. Theology of Liberation in Thought of Ali Shari’ati. Journal of Islam and Science 3: 259–88. [Google Scholar]
- Afary, Janet. 1996. Steering between Scylla and Charybdis: Shifting Gender Roles in Twentieth Century Iran. NWSA Journal 8: 28–49. [Google Scholar]
- Akhavi, Shahrough. 2018. Ali Shari`ati. In Key Islamic Political Thinkers. Edited by John L. Esposito and Emad El-Din Shahin. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 85–103. [Google Scholar]
- Ali, Kecia. 2019. The Making of the ‘Lady Imam’: An Interview with Amina Wadud. Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 35: 67–79. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ayubi, Zahra. 2012. Owning The Terms Of Leadership And Authority: Toward A Gender Inclusive Framework of American Muslim Religious Authority. In A Jihad for Justice: Honoring the Work and Life and Amina Wadud. Edited by Kecia Ali, Juliane Hammer and Laury Silvers. Akron: 48 Hour Books, pp. 47–58. [Google Scholar]
- Barlas, Asma. 2006. Women Re-reading Sacred Texts: Amin Wadud’s Hermeneutics of the Qur’an. In Modern Muslim Intellectuals and the Qur’an. Edited by Suha Taji-Farouki. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 97–123. [Google Scholar]
- Bayat, Asef. 1990. Shari’ati and Marx: A Critique of an “Islamic” Critique of Marxism. Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics 10: 19–41. [Google Scholar]
- Collins, Patricia Hill. 2000. Black Feminist Thought: Knowledge, Consciousness, and the Politics of Empowerment, 2nd ed. New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Cone, James H. 1969. Black Theology and Black Power. New York: Seabury Press. [Google Scholar]
- Cone, James H. 1970. A Black Theology of Liberation. New York: J. B. Lippincott Co. [Google Scholar]
- Cone, James H. 1975. God of the Oppressed. New York: Seabury Press. [Google Scholar]
- Dabashi, Hamid. 2008. Islamic Liberation Theology: Resisting the Empire. New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Dorroll, Philip. 2017. Post-Gezi Islamic Theology: Intersectional Islamic Feminism in Turkey. Review of Middle East Studies 50: 157–71. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dotson-Renta, Lara. 2022. Embodied Sisterhood: God-Talk in the Work of Delores S. Williams, amina wadud, and Ada María Isasi-Díaz. Journal of Hispanic/Latino Theology 24: 250–72. [Google Scholar]
- Eliaçık, İhsan. 2012. Interview: Fasting against Capitalism. Interview by Ayten Turan. R. İhsan Eliaçık. Available online: https://ihsaneliacik.com/fasting-against-capitalism-an-interview-with-ayten-turan/ (accessed on 5 April 2023).
- Esack, Farid. 2015. Islam, Feminism and Empire: A Comparison between the Approaches of Amina Wadud and Saba Mahmood. Journal of Gender and Religion in Africa 21: 27–48. [Google Scholar]
- Fadaee, Simin. 2022. Marxism, Islam and the Iranian Revolution. In Marxism, Religion, and Emancipatory Politics. Edited by Graeme Kirkpatrick, Peter McMylor and Simin Fadaee. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 103–20. [Google Scholar]
- Fanon, Frantz. 1963. The Wretched of the Earth. Translated by Constance Farrington. New York: Grove Press. First published in 1961. [Google Scholar]
- Ghamari-Tabrizi, Behrooz. 1996. Is Islamic Science Possible? Social Epistemology 10: 317–30. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ghamari-Tabrizi, Behrooz. 2004. Contentious Public Religion: Two Conceptions of Islam in Revolutionary Iran Ali Shariati and Abdolkarim Soroush. International Sociology 19: 504–23. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- hooks, bell. 1995. Killing Rage: Ending Racism. New York: Henry Holt and Co. [Google Scholar]
- hooks, bell. 2000. Feminist Theory: From Margin to Center, 2nd ed. London: Pluto Press. [Google Scholar]
- Jullien, François. 2014. On the Universal: The Uniform, the Common, and Dialogue between Cultures. Cambridge: Polity Press. [Google Scholar]
- Kanaaneh, Abed. 2021. Ali Shariʿati: Islamizing Socialism and Socializing Islam. Left History 24: 45–64. [Google Scholar]
- Khaki, El-Farouk. 2012. Expanding the Gender Jihad: Connecting the Dots. In A Jihad for Justice: Honoring the Work and Life and Amina Wadud. Edited by Kecia Ali, Juliane Hammer and Laury Silvers. Akron: 48 Hour Books, pp. 167–72. [Google Scholar]
- Khanlarzadeh, Mina. 2020. Theology of Revolution: In Ali Shari’ati and Walter Benjamin’s Political Thought. Religions 11: 504. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Levinas, Emmanuel. 1961. Totality and Infinity. Translated by Alphonso Lingis. Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Matin, Kamran. 2010. Decoding Political Islam: Uneven and Combined Development and Ali Shariati’s Political Thought. In International Relations and non-Western Thought: Imperialism, Colonialism, and Investigations of Global Modernity. Edited by Robbie Shilliam. London: Routledge, pp. 108–24. [Google Scholar]
- Mazinani Shariati, Soussan. 2007. Interview: Women in Shariati’s Project. Interview by Parvin Bakhtiarnejad. Etemad Newspaper. Available online: http://drshariati.org/show.asp?id=106 (accessed on 5 April 2023).
- Mir-Hosseini, Ziba. 2002. Religious Modernists and the ‘Woman Question’: Challenges and Complicities. In Twenty Years of Islamic Revolution: Political and Social Transition in Iran since 1979. Edited by Eric Hooglund. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, pp. 74–95. [Google Scholar]
- Miri, Seyed Javad. 2019. Frantz Fanon in Ali Shariati’s Reading: Is it Possible to Interpret Fanon in a Shariatian Form? In Frantz Fanon and Emancipatory Social Theory. Edited by Dustin J. Byrd and Seyed Javad Miri. Leiden: Brill, pp. 184–216. [Google Scholar]
- Moghissi, Haideh. 1996. Populism and Feminism in Iran: Women’s Struggle in a Male-Defined Revolutionary Movement. New York: St. Martin’s Press. [Google Scholar]
- Nasr, Seyyed Hossein. 2001. Science and Civilization in Islam. Chicago: ABC International Group. First published in 1968. [Google Scholar]
- Rahemtulla, Shadaab. 2017. Qur’an of the Oppressed Liberation Theology and Gender Justice in Islam. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Rahemtulla, Shadaab. 2019. The Politics of Paradigms: Liberation and Difference in Islam and Christianity. In Post-Christian Interreligious Liberation Theology. Edited by Hussam S. Timani and Loye Sekihata Ashton. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 29–46. [Google Scholar]
- Rahman, Momin. 2010. Queer as Intersectionality: Theorizing Gay Muslim Identities. Sociology 44: 944–61. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Rahnema, Ali. 2000. An Islamic Utopian: A Political Biography of Ali Shari’ati. London: I.B. Tauris. [Google Scholar]
- Rahnema, Ali. 2015. Shi‘i Reformation in Iran: The Life and Theology of Shari‘at Sangelaji. London: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Sadeghi-Boroujerdi, Eskandar. 2022. Shariati, Anti-Capitalism, and the Promise of the ‘Third World’. Philosophy and Global Affairs 2: 197–211. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Saffari, Siavash. 2019. Ali Shariati and Cosmopolitan Localism. Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 39: 282–95. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Saffari, Siavash. 2023. R. İhsan Eliaçık: Anti-Capitalist Islamic Thought in Turkey. In Globalizing Political Theory. Edited by Smita A. Rahman, Katherine A. Gordy and Shirin S. Deylami. New York: Routledge, pp. 120–29. [Google Scholar]
- Sangelaji, Shariat. 2014. Tawhid-e Ebadat (Monotheism of Worship). Riyadh: Aqideh. First published in 1940. [Google Scholar]
- Şengül, Serdar. 2015. Abluted Capitalism: Ali Shariati’s Critique of Capitalism in His Reading of Islamic Economy. Studies in Christian Ethics 28: 431–46. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shariati, Ali. 1971a. Tashayyo-e Alavi va Tashayyo-e Safavi (Alid Shi’ism and Safavid Shi’ism). Tehran: Hosseinieh Ershad. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1971b. Bazgasht beh kodam khish? (Return to Which Self?)—Collected Works: Volume 4. In Shariati: Complete Collection of Works. Tehran: Ali Shariati Cultural Foundation. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1976. Erfan, barabari, azadi (Spirituality, Equality, Freedom). Collected Works: Volume 2. In Shariati: Complete Collection of Works. Tehran: Ali Shariati Cultural Foundation. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1977. Ba Mokhatab-hay-e Ashena (With Familiar Audiences). Collected Works 1. Luxembourg: Europe Office for the Compilation and Publication of Dr. Ali Shariati. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1980a. Eslamshenasi 1 (Islamology 1). Collected Works 16. Tehran: Shariati Foundation. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1980b. Fatima is Fatima. Translated by Laleh Bakhtir. Tehran: Shariati Foundation. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1981a. Hussein Vares-e Adam (Hussein, the Heir to Adam). Collected Works 19. Tehran: Ghalam. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1981b. Tarikh va Shenakht-e Adyan 2 (History and Assessment of Religions 2). Collected Works 15. Tehran: Tashayyo. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1982a. Jahanbini va Ideolozhi (Worldview and Ideology). Collected Works 23. Tehran: Mona. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1982b. Zan (Woman). Collected Works 21. Tehran: Sabz. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1988. Religion vs Religion. Translated by Laleh Bakhtiar. Albuquerque: ABJAD. First published in 1970. [Google Scholar]
- Shariati, Ali. 1993. Hajj: The Pilgrimage. Translated by Ali A. Behzadnia, and Najla Denny. Costa Mesa: Jubilee. First published in 1978. [Google Scholar]
- Siddiqui, Sohaira. 2020. Good Scholarship/Bad Scholarship: Consequences of the Heuristic of Intersectional Islamic Studies. Journal of the American Academy of Religion 88: 142–74. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Timani, Hussam S. 2019. Confessing Tawhid and the Trinity: Towards a Christian–Muslim Theology of Liberation. In Post-Christian Interreligious Liberation Theology. Edited by Hussam S. Timani and Loye Sekihata Ashton. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 9–27. [Google Scholar]
- Tormos, Fernando. 2017. Intersectional Solidarity. Politics, Groups, and Identities 5: 707–20. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Völker, Katharina. 2021. Freedom in amina wadud’s Tawḥīdic Hermeneutics and Mouhanad Khorchide’s Theology of Mercy. Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations 32: 261–78. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wadud-Muhsin, Amina. 1995. On Belonging as a Muslim Woman. In My Soul Is a Witness: African-American Women’s Spirituality. Edited by Gloria Wade-Gayles. Boston: Beacon Press, pp. 253–65. [Google Scholar]
- Wadud, Amina. 1999. Qur’an and Woman: Rereading the Sacred Text from a Woman’s Perspective. Oxford: Oxford University Press. First published in 1992. [Google Scholar]
- Wadud, Amina. 2006. Inside the Gender Jihad: Women’s Reform in Islam. Oxford: Oneworld Publications. [Google Scholar]
- Wadud, Amina. 2008. Engaging Tawhid in Islam and Feminisms. International Feminist Journal of Politics 10: 435–38. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Wadud, Amina. 2013a. Hajar of the Desert. Feminism and Religion. Available online: https://feminismandreligion.com/2013/10/17/hajar-of-the-desert-by-amina-wadud/ (accessed on 5 April 2023).
- Wadud, Amina. 2013b. Interview: Portrait of a Muslim Feminist. Interview by Azzurra Meringolo. Reset Dialogues on Civilizations. Available online: https://www.resetdoc.org/story/amina-wadud-portrait-of-a-muslim-feminist/ (accessed on 5 April 2023).
- Wadud, Amina. 2021. Reflections on Islamic Feminist Exegesis of the Qur’an. Religions 12: 497. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Walker, Alice. 1983. In Search of Our Mothers’ Gardens: Womanist Prose. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. [Google Scholar]
- Williams, Delores S. 1987. Womanist Theology: Black Women’s Voices. Christianity and Crisis 47: 66–70. [Google Scholar]
- Williams, Delores S. 1993. Sisters in the Wilderness: The Challenge of Womanist God-Talk. Maryknoll: Orbis. [Google Scholar]
- Malcolm X, and Alex Haley. 2001. The Autobiography of Malcolm X. London: Penguin. First published in 1965. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2023 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Saffari, S. Tawhid Paradigm and an Inclusive Concept of Liberative Struggle. Religions 2023, 14, 1088. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091088
Saffari S. Tawhid Paradigm and an Inclusive Concept of Liberative Struggle. Religions. 2023; 14(9):1088. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091088
Chicago/Turabian StyleSaffari, Siavash. 2023. "Tawhid Paradigm and an Inclusive Concept of Liberative Struggle" Religions 14, no. 9: 1088. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091088
APA StyleSaffari, S. (2023). Tawhid Paradigm and an Inclusive Concept of Liberative Struggle. Religions, 14(9), 1088. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14091088